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  • [♩INTRO]

  • The DNA double helix is one of the more iconic images in all of science.

  • Slapping a twisty piece of DNA on something is guaranteed

  • to make it look morescience-y.

  • But there's a reason it looks like that.

  • It turns out our cells

  • have a finely tuned sense of aesthetics.

  • The DNA inside our cells is almost exclusively right-handed.

  • This doesn't mean it never has to fight over the single

  • lefty desk in the lecture hall.

  • Instead, it means the double helix twists from lower left to upper right

  • whether you're holding it upside down or right side up.

  • Now, just to be clear, our DNA can temporarily form left-handed helices

  • under incredibly specific conditions.

  • But those lefty molecules look pretty bizarre,

  • and while they might crop up in cells in specific situations,

  • the majority of the time our genetic code is stored in a right-handed twist.

  • And that's the kind of helix our cells are adapted to decode

  • if our genetic information were left-handed, our cells wouldn't be able to use it!

  • This biological preference for right-handed DNA is very strict.

  • In fact, it holds across all forms of lifewhich is kind of odd.

  • Why does DNA have to twist the same way in every living organism?

  • The leading hypothesis to explain why DNA always twists to the right

  • has to do with the shape of its building blocks, or nucleotides.

  • And nucleotides are chiral, a word used to describe things

  • that are mirror images of each other, like your left and right hand.

  • No matter how much you flip or twist a pair of chiral molecules,

  • you can't superimpose them.

  • The double helix twists toward the right.

  • But when we talk about left- or right-handed when talking about a nucleotide,

  • it just means one of those two mirror-image forms.

  • Our cells only have the left-handed form of these DNA nucleotides,

  • and they only make right-handed helices.

  • The mirror images of our nucleotides would theoretically

  • make left-handed helices.

  • So the question becomes:

  • why do all living cells only use left-handed nucleotides?

  • The short answer is that there may just have been more of them around

  • 4 billion years ago when life first evolved.

  • But the longer, more interesting answer might come from space.

  • Specifically, from the high-energy radiation known as cosmic rays.

  • When cosmic rays shower down on Earth's atmosphere,

  • they cause gas molecules in the atmosphere

  • to break down into atomic particles like electrons.

  • In the breakdown process, the cosmic rays put a bit of a spin on the electrons.

  • Which, once again, means they can go left or right.

  • But a funny quirk about electrons from degraded atoms

  • is that they are more likely to spin towards the left than the right.

  • In fact, while rightward spinning electrons can be generated in a lab,

  • they have never been observed in nature.

  • And physicists have yet to come up with a good reason why.

  • Regardless, about fifty years ago, scientists tried to reconcile

  • this electron asymmetry with the lack of left-handed DNA helices in nature.

  • They proposed that these lefty electrons could

  • preferentially destroy chiral molecules of a single handedness,

  • like the right-handed nucleotides that form left-handed DNA helices.

  • Then, in 2015, scientists demonstrated that that's physically possible -- maybe.

  • They shot a beam of left- or right-handed electrons at a gas

  • and found a slight difference.

  • The right-handed electrons destroyed

  • 0.03% more right-handed gas molecules than lefty ones.

  • That's a tiny number.

  • But researchers believe it's possible that over billions of years,

  • that miniscule percentage could add up

  • or that this reaction could be amplified somehow through other means.

  • Regardless, if left-handed DNA nucleotides are even that tiny bit

  • more resistant to space radiation,

  • they'd still be an evolutionary advantage for right-handed helices.

  • Of course, this experiment only demonstrates the general chemical idea

  • that electrons might interact differently with different-handed molecules.

  • It didn't actually show anything to do with DNA directly.

  • But it is a first step toward understanding why our cells

  • have such an ingrained bias against southpaw DNA.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow,

  • and thanks to all the awesome patrons who support what we do.

  • If you'd like to help out, as well as join an awesome community

  • of people and maybe earn some sweet perks, check out patreon.com/scishow.

  • [♩OUTRO]

[♩INTRO]

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B2 中高級

太空如何塑造了我們的DNA (How Space Might Have Shaped Our DNA)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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